This album holds one of Graham's truely amazing arangements of Women of Ireland by Seam O'Riada. Very moving.

Track Listing:

1.
Dance For Two People (Graham) - 2:13
Dedicated by Stan Watson to his two children, Naomi and Heironmous, and
played on nylon-strung guitar, the E string tuned down to D. I like the
way the pleasant acidity of the discords in the treble echoes the often-anomalous
relationship between siblings.

2.
Bloody Fields Of Flannders (Trad.:Arr. Graham) - 1:35
Better known from the Hamish Henderson se to it as 'The Freedom Come-All-Ye",
the pipe tune dedicated to those who fell at the Battle of Loos in World
War I. Hamish says it may be related to the tune "Busk, Busk Bonnie
Lassie", as played by Alex Stuart of Perthshire. Davey uses the "high
strung" tuning on his steel-string guitar.

3.
Indian Piece (Unknown) - 2:41
As the "title" indicates, Davey doesn't know much about this
one. He plays it on the five course fretless Arabic oud, (tuned G-A-D-G-C),
ancestor of the western lute, which even gets named (al-oud) from the
original. The instrument has an extra-unused peg hole, because as Davey
points out "only Allah is perfect"

4.
Lute Prelude (J.S. Bach) - 1:22
Davey got the original score from Tim Walker. He has transported it down
from the original C minor to B minor, and plays it on nylon strings.

5.
She Moved Through The Bizarre (Trad.;Arr. Graham) - 4:10
An Irish composed tune, which nevertheless popular with traditional musicians
like the great travelled lady Margaret Barry. Davey plays it on the sarod.

6.
Minuets I and II (Visee) - 2:32
By Robert de Visee, a muscian at the court of Louis XIV, from a D minor
suite composed in 1686. Davey plays it on the high-strung steel guitar.

7.
Reng (Payvar) - 1:38
By Faramarz Payvar. Davey got this from a Nonesuch album of Persian classical
music. It's a 6/8 dance from a longer piece called "Dastgah Mahour"
and is played on the oud.

8.
Breathe On Me, Breath Of God (English Hymn) - 1:22
Though this comes from an English hymn - Davey learnt it in the Presbyterian
church near his house when he was exploring the native esoteric teaching
on Christianity - the way he has chorded it is very Horace Silver feel,
to me, especially the unexpected F sharp minor seventh on the word "God".
The high-strung steel rings out particularly well here. I like the tiny
bass runs that start at the second line: simple and effective.

9.
El Café De Chinitas (Trad,;Arr. Graham) - 1:25
A traditional Spanish tune, similar to Soleares, which was collected by
the great Spanish folk poet, Federico Garcia Lorca, murdered by the fascists
in 1936

10.
Happy Meeting In Glory (Spence) - 2:00
From the repertoire of Joseph Spence, the Bahaman gospel singer and player
who's "Bid You Goodnight" has been popularised by the Incredible
String Band and the Grateful Dead. This tune has also been recorded by
Ry Cooder. Again a very contemporary feel.

11.
Farewell To The Creeks (Robertson) - 1:28
By Pipe Major James Robertson. Another pipe tune made familiar, as it's
song by Hamish Henderson, in this case as "The 51st Highland diversion's
farewell to Sicily" High-strung steel guitar.

12.
Yemeni Taqsim - 3:05
This taqsim is an improvised piece, which occurs all over the Arab world.
In Volume II of her superb six-album set, "Music in the World of
Islam" Jean Jenkins records examples from Iraq, Bahrain and Turkey.
Davey learnt this from two of his Israeli students and plays in on the
oud.

13.Mna
Na Heireann (O'Riada) - 3:30
(Women of Ireland) by Seam O'Riada: Possibly one of my favourite pieces
on the album, a slow air familiarised in the version by the Chieftains
recorded for the Stanley Kubrick film "Barry Lyndon". Davey
points out that the mode is a similar mode used by Miles Davis for "Kind
of Blue" and also (I add) to Pentangle's "I've Got a Feeling".

14.
Kim (Graham) - 1:59
By Davey Graham: Dedicated to his now 19 year old daughter, this illustrates
his playing on the bouzouki, which he plays (lord be praised) in a manner
quiet different from the neo-madolin tinkling associated with certain
groups on the folk scene. He prefers this recording to his guitar version
on his earlier "All That Moody" album.

15.
Lady Hunsdon's Puffe (Dowland) - 1:14
By John Dowland (1562-1626): I've been unable to find any definition of
a puffle, so I suppose we'll have to assume it means what it sounds like:
A trifle, or a diversion. Dowland was one of the greatest lute players
of his time, playing at the courts of King Charles I in London.

16. Wash Nha Homa(Trad,;Moroccan) - 2:16
A Moroccan tune played on the oud, related to the melhoun devotional songs
of the south of the country.

17.
Two Hymns (Gibbons) - 1:16
By Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625): The first is a communion hymn , the second
called "Eternal Rules of the Ceaseless Round" Nylon-strung guitar.

18.
Uskudar (Tra.;Turkish) - 1:42
A Turkish folk song about the finding of a lover's handkerchief. Here
preformed on the sarod.